Munster put the disappointment of defeat in Belfast firmly behind them with a 29-11 RaboDirect PRO12 win over Benetton Treviso at Thomond Park Stadium, a bonus point victory that gives them a great morale boost as they head into the Heineken Cup.

It was a very mixed bag of a performance but nevertheless they'll rightly take more positives than negatives from a game that saw them lead 10-6 at the break and then run in three second half tries against an Italian side who made them fight every inch of the way.

In fact the visitors will consider themselves unlucky not to have been closer at the break. In added time they forced a penalty that Kris Burton saw rebound off an upright and that after Munster had to scramble in defence to prevent a try when Treviso had turned desperate defence inside their own 22 into a scoring opportunity.

Then, when Keith Earls brushed through Burton's feeble effort of a tackle to score under the posts in the 49th minute, Treviso's response was almost immediate, their big number 8 Manoa Vosawai getting on the end of a forward maul to score out wide.

And it remained a tight, five point game until Man of the Match, the impressive James Coughlan peeled around right for his side's third try, the TMO called in to confirm - Conor Murray's similar request moments earlier denied - with Munster's bonus point try coming five minutes from time courtesy of Simon Zebo.

Munster did cough up a number of their own line-out ball and as would be expected given the composition of the Treviso pack there were times when they were discommoded at set scrum but they did create more opportunities than heretofore and the constant changing in personnel over the past number of weeks sounds like a reasonable explanation for those deficiencies.

On an individual basis, Zebo illuminated the opening half with one searing break, Peter O'Mahony showed no ill effects following his enforced break through injury, Lifeimi Mafi, afforded more space than he normally is, posed a constant threat, Damien Varley carried strongly and with intent while it's reported that the knee injury that forced Niall Ronan to retire shortly after he'd scored a 23rd minute try - created by a sumptuous off load from Mafi - isn't likely to rule him out of next week's game with Castres Olympique.

Paul O'Connell gave another commanding performance alongside the equally industrious Donnacha Ryan and Donncha O'Callaghan was all business when he came on for Ronan, his first action being to pinch a Treviso front of lineout ball and later involved in race with winger Nitoglia for a touchdown, a contest, in fairness, he was always going to lose.

Afterwards the Man of the Match accepted that there were things to be worked on. "Look, we know that performance wasn't without flaws. We knew we'd be up against it, they're a good side and kept going right to the end.

"I suppose we can look at the changes we've had week to week but the point is we coped with that," Coughlan said, " got the result. It's points in the bank, we've won no title but we're in a better place now than at the start of the day in terms of this league and it gives us the type of start to what are two huge weeks for us."